Amino Acids and pH Flashcards

1
Q

Why do we need amino acids?

A
  • Generate metabolic energy
  • Substrates for protein synthesis
  • Substrates for production of coenzymes
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2
Q

Describe the structure of amino acids.

A
  • Central carbon is an alpha carbon
  • R group determines properties
  • Adjacent amino acids form peptide (CO-NH) bonds
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3
Q

What is special about all amino acids, apart from glycine?

A
  • ASYMMETRIC
  • Exist as enantiomers
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4
Q

Where do the L- and D-enantiomers of amino acids occur?

A
  • L-FORM in all amino acids in humans
  • D-FORM in antibiotics/bacterial cell walls
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5
Q

Describe the charges of amino acids at pH 7.4

A
  • Amino group is positively charged (NH3 +)
  • Carboxyl group is negatively charged (COO-)
  • Amino acid is a zwitterion
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6
Q

When is an amino acid positively/negatively charged/no net charge?

A
  • POSITIVELY - when pH is < pKa of carboxyl group (i.e 1.8-2.4)
  • NEGATIVELY - when pH is > pKa of amino group (i.e 8.8-11)
  • No net charge at isoelectric point - number of + and - charges are equal
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7
Q

Amino acids are soluble at pH 7.4. Why?

A
  • Amino groups are protonated
  • Charged groups form hydrogen bonds with water molecules
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8
Q

How can amino acids be classified?

A
  • Essential or non-essential
  • Nature of side-chain
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9
Q

What makes an amino acid essential/non-essential?

A
  • ESSENTIAL - not synthesised in body so taken in through diet e.g valine, lysine
  • NON-ESSENTIAL - synthesised in body so don’t need to be taken in through diet e.g alanine, glycine
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10
Q

Describe nonpolar, aliphatic groups.

A
  • R group is nonpolar and hydrophobic
  • Promote hydrophobic interactions within protein structures
  • Cannot form hydrogen bonds so don’t dissolve in water
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11
Q

Describe polar, uncharged groups.

A
  • R group is more hydrophilic than those of nonpolar amino acids
  • Functional groups form hydrogen bonds with water
  • EXAMPLE: OH group in serine/ Amide group in glutamine
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12
Q

Describe aromatic groups.

A
  • Contain nonpolar phenyl groups that participate in hydrophobic interactions
  • OH group of tyrosine is hydrophilic so forms hydrogen bonds
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13
Q

Describe cysteine.

A
  • Contain thiol groups that form disulphide bonds through oxidation to form cystine
  • Present in blood but not very water soluble
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14
Q

Describe methionine

A
  • Nonpolar with bulky hydrophobic side chains
  • No thiol groups so no disulphide bonds
  • Involved in metabolism - transfers methyl group to other sulfur containing molecules
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15
Q

GIve examples of charged amino acids.

A
  • Acidic aspartate and glutamate have COO- at physiological pH
  • Basic lysine and arginine have NH3+ at physiological pH
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16
Q

Describe the bonding that charged groups can undergo.

A
  • Basic amino acids form ionic bonds with negatively charged amino acids
  • Acidic and basic amino acids participate in hydrogen bonding
17
Q

Describe amino acid metabolism.

A
  • Ketogenic amino acids degraded to acetyl CoA, -used for ketogenesis during starvation e.g lysine, leucine
  • Ketogenic and aromatic glucogenic amino acids - degraded to ketone bodies and glucose e.g isoleucine, phenylalanine
  • Glucogenic amino acids - degraded to glucose in TCA cycle or glycolysis
18
Q

What allows amino acids to act as buffers?

A
  • Weakly acidic carboxyl groups and weakly basic amino groups
  • Ionisable side chains
19
Q

What can be calculated from the Henderson-Hasselbach equation?

A
  • Relationship between pH of solution and pKa of acid
  • When pH = pKa –> [A-] = [HA]. 50% of weak acid is dissociated
  • For calculating ionic forms of acid/base drugs
  • For calculating how shifts in Bicarbonate ion concentration [HCO3-] and CO2 in ABGs influence pH
20
Q

What are buffers?

A
  • Consist of HA and A-
  • Resist changes in pH when H+ and OH- added
  • When acid added, A- neutralises it to form HA
  • When base added, HA neutralises it and forms A-
  • Maximum buffering within +/- 1 of pKa
21
Q

Describe the acetic acid curve.

A
  • pKa of 4.8 so buffering region from 3.8-5.8
22
Q

As pH increases to pK1 and pK2, what happens?

A
  • pK1 - COOH dissociates to form COO-
  • pK2 - NH3+ deprotonates to form NH2
23
Q

How is isoelectric point calculated?

A

(pK1+pK2)/2

24
Q

How does gel electrophoresis work?

A
  • Separation of proteins done at a pH above the pI of the major proteins involved
  • Net negative charge determines movement towards positively charged cathode
25
Q

How does pH affect movement of amino acids during electrophoresis?

A
  • POSITIVELY CHARGED (pH<pI) moves towards anode
  • NEGATIVELY CHARGED (ph> pI) moves towards cathode
  • NEUTRAL - no net charge - doesn’t migrate
26
Q

How can pI be calculate for amino acids with basic/acidic side chains?

A
  • Between 2 higher pKas for basic
  • Between 2 lower pKas for acidic
27
Q

Why does the body need to regulate pH and what pH is the blood kept at? Give examples of some physiological buffering systems.

A
  • Physiological processes are pH dependent
  • Blood pH kept at 7.35-7.45
  • BICARBONATE BUFFER SYSTEM/PHOSPHATE BUFFER SYSTEM
28
Q

Describe the bicarbonate buffer system.

A

CO2 + H2O ⇄ H2CO3 ⇄ H+ + HCO3-
- pKa of H2CO3 is 6.1
- At low pH, HCO3- absorbs H+ and converts to H2CO3 then CO2.
- At high pH (low H+), H2CO3 dissociate to H+ and HCO3